General Protocol to Obtain D-Glucosamine from Biomass Residues: Shrimp Shells, Cicada Sloughs and Cockroaches

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Abstract

A general protocol is developed to obtain D-glucosamine from three widely available biomass residues: shrimp shells, cicada sloughs, and cockroaches. The protocol includes three steps: (1) demineralization, (2) deproteinization, and (3) chitin hydrolysis. This simple, general protocol opens the door to obtain an invaluable nitrogen-containing compound from three biomass residues, and it can potentially be applied to other chitin sources. White needle-like crystals of pure D-glucosamine are obtained in all cases upon purification by crystallization. Characterization data (NMR, IR, and mass spectrometry) of D-glucosamine obtained from the three chitin sources are similar and confirm its high purity. NMR investigation demonstrates that D-glucosamine is obtained mainly as the α-anomer, which undergoes mutarotation in aqueous solution achieving equilibrium after 440 min, in which the anomeric glucosamine distribution is 60% α-anomer and 40% β-anomer.

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Bertuzzi, D. L., Becher, T. B., Capreti, N. M. R., Amorim, J., Jurberg, I. D., Megiatto, J. D., & Ornelas, C. (2018). General Protocol to Obtain D-Glucosamine from Biomass Residues: Shrimp Shells, Cicada Sloughs and Cockroaches. Global Challenges, 2(11). https://doi.org/10.1002/gch2.201800046

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